Published2022Journal of Financial Economics
Social interactions and households' flood insurance decisions
Authors: Hu
Abstract
Flooding is the most costly natural disaster faced by US households, yet policymakers are puzzled by the low take-up rates for flood insurance. Leveraging novel transaction-level data, this paper studies the influence of social interactions on households' insurance decisions. I show that households increase flood insurance purchases by 1-5 percent when their geographically distant friends are exposed to flooding events or to campaigns for flood insurance. These exogenous shocks to far-away friends should not affect local households' own insurance decisions except through peer effects. I provide evidence suggesting that social interactions facilitate learning through information dissemination and attention triggering.
Keywords
Flood insurancesocial learningpeer effectssocial networks
Tags of Social Finance
#Archival Empirical#Consumer Decisions